1,210 research outputs found
Potential Role of Nuclear Factor ÎșB in Diabetic Cardiomyopathy
Diabetic cardiomyopathy entails the cardiac injury induced by diabetes independently of any vascular disease or hypertension. Some transcription factors have been proposed to control the gene program involved in the setting and development of related processes. Nuclear factor-kappa B is a pleiotropic transcription factor associated to the regulation of many heart diseases. However, the nuclear factor-kappa B role in diabetic cardiomyopathy is under investigation. In this paper, we review the nuclear factor-kappa B pathway and its role in several processes that have been linked to diabetic cardiomyopathy, such as oxidative stress, inflammation, endothelial dysfunction, fibrosis, hypertrophy and apoptosis
Study of a Solution with COTS for the LHCb Calorimeter Upgrade
AbstractWe present a solution made out of Components Out of Shelf (COTS) for the analog processing of the signal of the LHCb calorimeters in the framework of the foreseen upgrade of the detector. The present proposal is based on the current functional solution, yet, to meet the stringent noise requirements, a number of modifications are proposed. Preliminary results on the prototype boards show promising results
Integrated test environment for a part of the LHCb calorimeter - TWEPP09
An integrated test environment for the data acquisition electronics of the Scintillator Pad Detector (SPD) from the calorimeter of the LHCb experiment is presented. It allows to test separately every single board or to perform global system tests, while being able to emulate every part of the system and debug it. This environment is foreseen to test the production of spare electronic boards and help the maintenance of the SPD electronics along the life of the detector. The heart of the system is an Altera Stratix II FPGA while the main board can be controlled over USB, Ethernet or WiFi
Study of η â ηâČ mixing from measurement of B (s)0 â J/Ïη(âČ) decay rates
A study of B and B0 s meson decays into J/Ïη and J/Ïη0 final states is performed using a data set of proton-proton collisions at centre-of-mass energies of 7 and 8 TeV, collected by the LCHb experiment and corresponding to 3.0 fbâ1 of integrated luminosity. The decay B0 â J/Ïη0 is observed for the first time. The following ratios of branching fractions are measured: B(B0 â J/Ïη0 ) B(B0 s â J/Ïη0) = (2.28 ± 0.65 (stat) ± 0.10 (syst) ± 0.13 (fs/fd)) Ă 10â2 , B(B0 â J/Ïη) B(B0 s â J/Ïη) = (1.85 ± 0.61 (stat) ± 0.09 (syst) ± 0.11 (fs/fd)) Ă 10â2 , where the third uncertainty is related to the present knowledge of fs/fd, the ratio between the probabilities for a b quark to form a B0 s or a B0 meson. The branching fraction ratios are used to determine the parameters of ηâη 0 meson mixing. In addition, the first evidence for the decay B0 s â Ï(2S)η 0 is reported, and the relative branching fraction is measured, B(B0 s â Ï(2S)η 0 ) B(B0 s â J/Ïη0) = (38.7 ± 9.0 (stat) ± 1.3 (syst) ± 0.9(B)) Ă 10â2 , where the third uncertainty is due to the limited knowledge of the branching fractions of J/Ï and Ï(2S) mesons
Sitagliptin improved glucose assimilation in detriment of fatty-acid utilization in experimental type-II diabetes: Role of GLP-1 isoforms in Glut4 receptor trafficking
Background: The distribution of glucose and fatty-acid transporters in the heart is crucial for energy consecution and myocardial function. In this sense, the glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) enhancer, sitagliptin, improves glucose homeostasis but it could also trigger direct cardioprotective actions, including regulation of energy substrate utilization. Methods: Type-II diabetic GK (Goto-Kakizaki), sitagliptin-treated GK (10 mg/kg/day) and wistar rats (n = 10, each) underwent echocardiographic evaluation, and positron emission tomography scanning for [ 18 F]-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose ( 18 FDG). Hearts and plasma were isolated for biochemical approaches. Cultured cardiomyocytes were examined for receptor distribution after incretin stimulation in high fatty acid or high glucose media. Results: Untreated GK rats exhibited hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia, insulin resistance, and plasma GLP-1 reduction. Moreover, GK myocardium decreased 18 FDG assimilation and diastolic dysfunction. However, sitagliptin improved hyperglycemia, insulin resistance, and GLP-1 levels, and additionally, enhanced 18 FDG uptake and diastolic function. Sitagliptin also stimulated the sarcolemmal translocation of the glucose transporter-4 (Glut4), in detriment of the fatty acyl translocase (FAT)/CD36. In fact, Glut4 mRNA expression and sarcolemmal translocation were also increased after GLP-1 stimulation in high-fatty acid incubated cardiomyocytes. PI3K/Akt and AMPKα were involved in this response. Intriguingly, the GLP-1 degradation metabolite, GLP-1(9-36), showed similar effects. Conclusions: Besides of its anti-hyperglycemic effect, sitagliptin-enhanced GLP-1 may ameliorate diastolic dysfunction in type-II diabetes by shifting fatty acid to glucose utilization in the cardiomyocyte, and thus, improving cardiac efficiency and reducing lipolysisThis work was supported by national grants from Ministerio de Educación
y Ciencia (SAF2009-08367), Comunidad de Madrid (CCG10-UAM/BIO-5289),
and PIE13/00051 and PI14/00386 (IS. Carlos III). Merck Sharp and Dohme
(Darmstadt, Germany) provided sitagliptin and partial financial support to the
conduct of the stud
Observation of the B0 âÏ0Ï0 decay from an amplitude analysis of B0 â (Ï+Ï-) (Ï+Ï-) decays
Proton-proton collision data recorded in 2011 and 2012 by the LHCb experiment, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 3.0 fbâ1 , are analysed to search for the charmless B0 â Ï 0Ï 0 decay. More than 600 B0 â (Ï +Ï â)(Ï +Ï â) signal decays are selected and used to perform an amplitude analysis, under the assumption of no CP violation in the decay, from which the B0 â Ï 0Ï 0 decay is observed for the first time with 7.1 standard deviations significance. The fraction of B0 â Ï 0Ï 0 decays yielding a longitudinally polarised final state is measured to be fL = 0.745+0.048 â0.058(stat) ± 0.034(syst). The B0 â Ï 0Ï 0 branching fraction, using the B0 â ÏKâ (892)0 decay as reference, is also reported as B(B0 â Ï 0Ï 0 ) = (0.94 ± 0.17(stat) ± 0.09(syst) ± 0.06(BF)) Ă 10â6
Searches for Î0b and Î0b decays to K0SpÏâ and K0SpKâ final states with first observation of the Î0bâK0SpÏâ decay
A search for previously unobserved decays of beauty baryons to the final states K0 S pÏâ and K0 S pKâ is reported. The analysis is based on a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.0 fbâ1 of pp collisions. The Î 0 b â K0pÏâ decay is observed with a significance of 8.6 Ï, with branching fraction B(Î 0 b â K0 pÏâ) = (1.26 ± 0.19 ± 0.09 ± 0.34 ± 0.05) Ă 10â5 , where the uncertainties are statistical, systematic, from the ratio of fragmentation fractions fÎ0 b /fd, and from the branching fraction of the B0â K0Ï +Ï â normalisation channel, respectively. A first measurement is made of the CP asymmetry, giving ACP (Î 0 b â K0 pÏâ) = 0.22 ± 0.13 (stat) ± 0.03 (syst). No significant signals are seen for Î 0 b â K0 S pKâ decays, Î0 b decays to both the K0 S pÏâ and K0 S pKâ final states, and the Î 0 b â Dâ s (â K0 SKâ)p decay, and upper limits on their branching fractions are reported
The Front End Electronics of the Scintillator Pad Detector of LHCb Calorimeter
In this paper the Front End electronics of the Scintillator Pad Detector (SPD) is outlined. The SPD is a sub-system of the Calorimeter of the LHCb experiment designed to discriminate between charged and neutral particles for the first level trigger. The system design is presented, describing its different functionalities implemented through three different cards and several ASICs. These functionalities are signal processing and digitization, data transmission, interface with control and timing systems of the experiment, low voltage power supply distribution and monitoring. Special emphasis is placed on installation and commissioning subjects such as cabling, grounding, shielding and power distribution
Observation of Z production in proton-lead collisions at LHCb
The first observation of Z boson production in proton-lead collisions at a centreof-mass energy per proton-nucleon pair of â sNN = 5 TeV is presented. The data sample corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 1.6 nbâ1 collected with the LHCb detector. The Z candidates are reconstructed from pairs of oppositely charged muons with pseudorapidities between 2.0 and 4.5 and transverse momenta above 20 GeV/c. The invariant dimuon mass is restricted to the range 60 â 120 GeV/c2 . The Z production cross-section is measured to be ÏZâ”+”â (fwd) = 13.5 +5.4 â4.0 (stat.) ± 1.2(syst.) nb in the direction of the proton beam and ÏZâ”+”â (bwd) = 10.7 +8.4 â5.1 (stat.) ± 1.0(syst.) nb in the direction of the lead beam, where the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic
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